(A Committee of Correspondence)

18 August 2013

"Western Media Misunderstands Egypt" Abdullah Schleifer

August 16, 2013

This article, by FPRI Senior Fellow Abdallah Schleifer,
originally appeared on AlArabia.net on August 13, 2013. Writing from
Cairo, Schleifer is Professor Emeritus of Journalism at the American
University in Cairo.

I
have been shocked by the shallow way the Western media has covered the
political situation in Cairo since the coup against former President
Mursi.

One would never know from reading The New York Times editorials and a
good deal of its coverage – along with that of other leading news
organizations – that the Egyptian armed forces had moved against a
political movement attempting to impose an authoritarian regime on the
country.

One would never know that, aside from coached demonstrators, the
exultation stirring the crowd at Cairo’s Rabaa al-Adawiya protest camp
was for martyrdom and not really for democracy.

One would never know, until pollsters finally released data on the
subject, that the overwhelming majority of Egyptians were opposed to
Muslim Brotherhood (MB) sit-ins and marches. These disrupted both the
traffic and a more general recovery in tourism, investment, job
creation, law and order – leading to calls for the sit-ins to end, one
way or another.

One would never know, given the absence of any real political parties
with grassroots support aside from the Muslim Brotherhood, that the
Egyptian army – with its massive number of conscripts and status as a
symbol of Egyptian independence – is the most significant popular
institution in this country, along with al-Azhar, Egypt’s top Islamic
institution.

One would never know any of this, because it was a military
intervention which deposed Mursi – and not a bloody civil war between a
couple of million MB and allied Salafi supporters, and the many, many
more opposed to the drift to an Islamist dictatorship. And that – a
civil war – is something media can focus on.

From much of the Western coverage, few would recall how press freedom
was undermined during Mursi’s one-year rule. This was overshadowed in
reports of how the army closed down MB media outlets after Mursi’s
ouster. However, tomorrow that period will be surveyed, along with the
present situation, in a Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) report
called “On the divide: Press Freedom at Risk in Egypt”.

Uncomfortable with the Military

The skewed media coverage of Egypt is partly due to something
intrinsic in journalism, which makes so many of its practitioners
uncomfortable or hostile to a professional army. Some Western
journalists –Americans in particular – make psychological associations
between military forces and the U.S. Army’s role in Vietnam, Afghanistan
and Iraq.

Many aspects of the media and military are at polar opposites.
Skepticism is a necessary journalistic virtue, versus honor and respect
for one’s superior officers in the military. ‘Nothing is sacred’ is a
plausible perspective for journalists, in the impromptu atmosphere of
the newsroom. Compare this with the sacred duty, or ritual-like
ceremonies of the military: the raising and lowering of the flag, and
the solemn honor guards escorting army parades.

Journalists react with great speed to an event: the need to scoop the
competition is a journalistic virtue. But armies need cautious
deliberation in actions that can mean death and destruction.

Military principles seem distant to the media in America and Europe,
where conscription ended years ago and nearly all journalists are too
young to identify with the critical role played by U.S. armed forces in
defeating the Nazis during World War II.

So in coverage of Egypt, the journalists face something unknowable and incongruous to them – the military. " Abdullah Schleifer

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"Western Media Misunderstands Egypt" Abdullah Schleifer

August 16, 2013

This article, by FPRI Senior Fellow Abdallah Schleifer,
originally appeared on AlArabia.net on August 13, 2013. Writing from
Cairo, Schleifer is Professor Emeritus of Journalism at the American
University in Cairo.

I
have been shocked by the shallow way the Western media has covered the
political situation in Cairo since the coup against former President
Mursi.

One would never know from reading The New York Times editorials and a
good deal of its coverage – along with that of other leading news
organizations – that the Egyptian armed forces had moved against a
political movement attempting to impose an authoritarian regime on the
country.

One would never know that, aside from coached demonstrators, the
exultation stirring the crowd at Cairo’s Rabaa al-Adawiya protest camp
was for martyrdom and not really for democracy.

One would never know, until pollsters finally released data on the
subject, that the overwhelming majority of Egyptians were opposed to
Muslim Brotherhood (MB) sit-ins and marches. These disrupted both the
traffic and a more general recovery in tourism, investment, job
creation, law and order – leading to calls for the sit-ins to end, one
way or another.